Police abuse

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  • mace1229
    mace1229 Posts: 9,829
    edited May 2017
    jeffbr said:
    I absolutely agree that there was no justification for the police to interview the kid without his parents present. There was no emergency that necessitated that, and absent an emergency they legally have to at least make efforts to contact the parents prior to a police interview. This was an abuse. The outcome, of course, was unpredictable and completely unexpected, but even if the kid had done nothing afterward and was still alive and walking around, it would still have been an abuse.

    If you guys had any idea the depth of research on false confessions and manipulated evidence when police deal with minors or other vulnerable individuals, I'm guessing you would also be concerned.
    Totally agree with you, Often. When my kids were younger I told them that they should always be respectful and comply with orders from the police, but before any sort of conversation with them, and before consenting to anything (like a search), they needed to inform the officer that they would comply once their parents were notified. I didn't want them defying the police, but I didn't want them talking to them, either. I let them know that in situations like that, the police are absolutely not their friend, and that it is very easy to get caught up in something beyond your control by having something misinterpreted. Luckily we only had one instance where that was put to the test. My daughter was called by a friend who was at a party who needed a ride home. My daughter hadn't been partying, and was always willing to help out a friend who was, so she swung by to pick up her friend just as the cops came to bust the party. They stopped her and talked to her for a minute. She let them know why she was there, and said that if they wanted to talk to her further she or they would have to call me first. The cop grunted, told her to get her friend and get out of there. And she was safely on her way. It could have been just as likely that if she had talked to the cop she would have been swept up in something she didn't have anything to do with. I appreciate that cops have a tough job to do, and made sure to teach my kids respect, but I also didn't want to ever see them become a victim of any sort of police abuse of power. Search my car? Sure thing, just get a warrant first. Enter my home? Sure thing, just get a warrant first. Show respect and willingness to comply, but protect yourself and don't give any information beyond what is requested.
    There's nothing wrong with teaching your kids that, and probably a good idea.
    But there's a difference between teaching your children to request the presence of their parents first and claiming it was unjustified for police to question a child. Cops absolutely have the right to ask questions, just like you have the right to refuse to answer. 
    And to the previous comment, there are false confessions, I recognize that. Maybe there aren't the best policies in practice, maybe they need to be improved. But calling it police abuse when they follow those policies is not a justified statement in my view. All that being said, I still think they only thing they should have dine differently was make sure the parents were aware of the situation. There was nothing in the article to indicate he was coerced into making a false statement. It appears they simply told him facts about the potential consequences, there have been high school teenagers who are on the sex offender list for very similar circumstances. I would not consider this abuse, they questioned him for a limited time and let him go. Many false confessions.

    Here is how it unfolded:
    A female students told school admin a boy had a video of a sexual encounter.
    Police asked the boy for permission to view and delete any illegal material. He gave permission. 
    It was a video (and not only audio as some suggested) but the video did not have any identifiable images but id have clear audio of a sexual encounter.
    They informed the student what potential consequences there could have been and released him.

    Where exactly did they go wrong? This is not some 16-hour interrogation that resulted in a false confession. They had a witness come forward, he gave consent (which they could have easily obtained a warrant if he didn't). Told him what was illegal and what could happen and released him. It doesn't appear they threatened to come after him the next day and throw the book at him.

    If this was your daughter on the video, how would you prefer they handle the situation? Ignore it? I mean, the only thing less they could have done than asking permission to view and delete it and then release him  is to ignore it, what else could they have done that was less involved?
  • unsung
    unsung I stopped by on March 7 2024. First time in many years, had to update payment info. Hope all is well. Politicians suck. Bye. Posts: 9,487
    No links from unsing about how cops are with teens on Chicago's Southside? (I'm open to allowing that the story about a suburban white kid is random chance). 
    I haven't decided if you have elevated yourself to troll staus or if you are just losing it.  Desperation.  You are reeking of it.
  • Go Beavers
    Go Beavers Posts: 9,554
    unsung said:
    No links from unsing about how cops are with teens on Chicago's Southside? (I'm open to allowing that the story about a suburban white kid is random chance). 
    I haven't decided if you have elevated yourself to troll staus or if you are just losing it.  Desperation.  You are reeking of it.
    Or I'm making an observation about what you don't talk about or link, combined with comments you have made and things you do link. Easier to call me a troll, I guess. 
  • unsung
    unsung I stopped by on March 7 2024. First time in many years, had to update payment info. Hope all is well. Politicians suck. Bye. Posts: 9,487
    Easier to nick pick a few posts instead of an entire history, I guess.
  • PP193448
    PP193448 Here Posts: 4,282
    Seems to me that unless the sexual act actually happened on school property, then the school should have turned this to the police, whom should have had the boy and his parents at the police department for questioning.  Why did this occur at the school??  Make a scene at the school to embarrass the boy and confiscate his phone information without a warrant.  If I were his parents I would be outraged how this transpired.
    2006 Clev,Pitt; 2008 NY MSGx2; 2010 Columbus; 2012 Missoula; 2013 Phoenix,Vancouver,Seattle; 2014 Cincy; 2016 Lex, Wrigley 1&2; 2018 Wrigley 1&2; 2022 Louisville
  • CM189191
    CM189191 Posts: 6,927
    edited May 2017
  • PP193448
    PP193448 Here Posts: 4,282
    CM189191 said:
    So in summary... if you have a gun in a public park and you refuse to listen to the cops and put it down, then you die.  Not hard to understand this one.  Ridiculous how many shots fired.  Pretty bad aim maybe.  Why not shoot to injure and not obliterate???  Geez.
    2006 Clev,Pitt; 2008 NY MSGx2; 2010 Columbus; 2012 Missoula; 2013 Phoenix,Vancouver,Seattle; 2014 Cincy; 2016 Lex, Wrigley 1&2; 2018 Wrigley 1&2; 2022 Louisville
  • mace1229
    mace1229 Posts: 9,829
    edited May 2017
    PP193448 said:
    Seems to me that unless the sexual act actually happened on school property, then the school should have turned this to the police, whom should have had the boy and his parents at the police department for questioning.  Why did this occur at the school??  Make a scene at the school to embarrass the boy and confiscate his phone information without a warrant.  If I were his parents I would be outraged how this transpired.
    Because he was showing people at school.
    That sort of thing happens all the time, police question kids at school about an event that happened at school.
    If it was like any other school in America they don't make a scene, its not like he gets questioned in front of everyone in the lunch room. He was likely called into the office like 100 other kids that day and range from being a witness to something, forgot his homework and mom dropped it off, to something serious like this. From there he was put into a private room where this conversation happened. No one probably even knew unless he told his friends what happened. There really isn't any big deal about it. 
    What would be a bigger deal is to escort him to the police station where everyone sees him leaving campus escorted by a police officer, that seems like a bigger deal to me.
    They did not confiscate his phone. They asked to search it and he gave permission. Again that happens all the time. I've been pulled over and been asked to search my car before, you have the right to say yes or no. In this case, I'm guessing if he said no they would have detained him for an hour or two until there was a warrant based on witness statements.
    Its sad what happened, but I really dont get all this defense for this kid who filmed him having sex with another student (probably unknowingly) and was showing it around school. Thats a prick move, he deserved to be questioned by police and made aware of the possible consequences. Its a tragedy what happened afterwards, but it was a prick move that he did and should not have gone ignored. Yes, the school should have notified parents and probably suspended him. But this is a thread about police abuse, and it was not police abuse.
    Post edited by mace1229 on
  • mcgruff10
    mcgruff10 New Jersey Posts: 29,116
    PP193448 said:
    CM189191 said:
    So in summary... if you have a gun in a public park and you refuse to listen to the cops and put it down, then you die.  Not hard to understand this one.  Ridiculous how many shots fired.  Pretty bad aim maybe.  Why not shoot to injure and not obliterate???  Geez.
    No one is trained to shoot to injure, you always aim center mass.  
    And I agree, way too many shots fired.  I'm thinking nerves and bad aim came into play.
    I'll ride the wave where it takes me......
  • CM189191
    CM189191 Posts: 6,927
    PP193448 said:
    CM189191 said:
    So in summary... if you have a gun in a public park and you refuse to listen to the cops and put it down, then you die.  Not hard to understand this one.  Ridiculous how many shots fired.  Pretty bad aim maybe.  Why not shoot to injure and not obliterate???  Geez.
    Ah yes, the old 'he didn't do what he was told' defense where the only living witnesses are Police Officers.  Funny how that works.

    I wonder where the body cams are?  Probably malfunctioned....
  • mace1229
    mace1229 Posts: 9,829
    CM189191 said:
    PP193448 said:
    CM189191 said:
    So in summary... if you have a gun in a public park and you refuse to listen to the cops and put it down, then you die.  Not hard to understand this one.  Ridiculous how many shots fired.  Pretty bad aim maybe.  Why not shoot to injure and not obliterate???  Geez.
    Ah yes, the old 'he didn't do what he was told' defense where the only living witnesses are Police Officers.  Funny how that works.

    I wonder where the body cams are?  Probably malfunctioned....
    Serious question for you then.
    Which do you find more likely.
    A. Multiple cops were in on it together to murder some random guy for no reason  and help each other cover it up. All involved are completely fine with this and not one refuses to go along with it.
    B. The dude really had a gun and really refused to put it down and the cops actually felt threatened.

    I would say B sounds much more plausible. You wouldn't agree?
  • tbergs
    tbergs Posts: 10,407
    edited May 2017
    I'm still surprised when I hear people ask why they didn't just try and shoot to injure them. TV and movies really have jaded people's view of what a real life situation is like. No one is that good under real life pressure with adrenaline and tunnel vision kicking in. If they were able to shoot to injure and believed that person still wouldn't be able to harm them then we wouldn't really need sharpshooters or snipers.

    As McGruff stated, police are trained to shoot center mass and to shoot until the person is no longer a threat, which means on the ground. You need to also consider that as the officers are firing, they are not counting their shots, they are looking at the threat. I would like to see anyone here if confronted by someone with a gun, fire 2 shots and call it good if the person threatening you is still standing. Hindsight is 20/20. For those who have never done so, I would encourage you to go through the shoot/no shoot simulation training that officers go through to get an idea of what they are being faced with. It's not so easy and you only have seconds to decide whether you shoot or get shot if you are facing an armed subject.
    Post edited by tbergs on
    It's a hopeless situation...
  • CM189191
    CM189191 Posts: 6,927
    mace1229 said:
    CM189191 said:
    PP193448 said:
    CM189191 said:
    So in summary... if you have a gun in a public park and you refuse to listen to the cops and put it down, then you die.  Not hard to understand this one.  Ridiculous how many shots fired.  Pretty bad aim maybe.  Why not shoot to injure and not obliterate???  Geez.
    Ah yes, the old 'he didn't do what he was told' defense where the only living witnesses are Police Officers.  Funny how that works.

    I wonder where the body cams are?  Probably malfunctioned....
    Serious question for you then.
    Which do you find more likely.
    A. Multiple cops were in on it together to murder some random guy for no reason  and help each other cover it up. All involved are completely fine with this and not one refuses to go along with it.
    B. The dude really had a gun and really refused to put it down and the cops actually felt threatened.

    I would say B sounds much more plausible. You wouldn't agree?

    Right, those are the only 2 scenarios that could have possibly occurred

    I'm sure the cops felt threatened,  they're terrible shots.  It sounded like 4 officers unloaded their clips and still didn't manage to kill him.  Also, black man with a gun and all.  It's a shame they were unable are not trained to deescalate the situation.  Shoot first ask questions later, I guess.
  • tbergs
    tbergs Posts: 10,407
    CM189191 said:
    mace1229 said:
    CM189191 said:
    PP193448 said:
    CM189191 said:
    So in summary... if you have a gun in a public park and you refuse to listen to the cops and put it down, then you die.  Not hard to understand this one.  Ridiculous how many shots fired.  Pretty bad aim maybe.  Why not shoot to injure and not obliterate???  Geez.
    Ah yes, the old 'he didn't do what he was told' defense where the only living witnesses are Police Officers.  Funny how that works.

    I wonder where the body cams are?  Probably malfunctioned....
    Serious question for you then.
    Which do you find more likely.
    A. Multiple cops were in on it together to murder some random guy for no reason  and help each other cover it up. All involved are completely fine with this and not one refuses to go along with it.
    B. The dude really had a gun and really refused to put it down and the cops actually felt threatened.

    I would say B sounds much more plausible. You wouldn't agree?

    Right, those are the only 2 scenarios that could have possibly occurred

    I'm sure the cops felt threatened,  they're terrible shots.  It sounded like 4 officers unloaded their clips and still didn't manage to kill him.  Also, black man with a gun and all.  It's a shame they were unable are not trained to deescalate the situation.  Shoot first ask questions later, I guess.
    We can all sit around and hypothesize how it went down, but it seems that you have already made up your mind that this was a bad shooting so nothing the police say or that the media reports contradicting this train of thought will be enough. Based on that, then what do you suggest should have been done differently? How long is a police officer supposed to negotiate with an unknown subject holding a gun who won't put it down in a public place? Until they fire first?

    What if this man showed up in your front yard holding this gun, are you going to go out and negotiate with him once he has refused to put it down and is making gestures to point it at you? De-escalation only works to a certain extent and under specific circumstances. 
    It's a hopeless situation...
  • mace1229
    mace1229 Posts: 9,829
    CM189191 said:
    mace1229 said:
    CM189191 said:
    PP193448 said:
    CM189191 said:
    So in summary... if you have a gun in a public park and you refuse to listen to the cops and put it down, then you die.  Not hard to understand this one.  Ridiculous how many shots fired.  Pretty bad aim maybe.  Why not shoot to injure and not obliterate???  Geez.
    Ah yes, the old 'he didn't do what he was told' defense where the only living witnesses are Police Officers.  Funny how that works.

    I wonder where the body cams are?  Probably malfunctioned....
    Serious question for you then.
    Which do you find more likely.
    A. Multiple cops were in on it together to murder some random guy for no reason  and help each other cover it up. All involved are completely fine with this and not one refuses to go along with it.
    B. The dude really had a gun and really refused to put it down and the cops actually felt threatened.

    I would say B sounds much more plausible. You wouldn't agree?

    Right, those are the only 2 scenarios that could have possibly occurred

    I'm sure the cops felt threatened,  they're terrible shots.  It sounded like 4 officers unloaded their clips and still didn't manage to kill him.  Also, black man with a gun and all.  It's a shame they were unable are not trained to deescalate the situation.  Shoot first ask questions later, I guess.
    The problem is, there isn't much time to ask questions when someone is pointing a gun at you threatening to shoot.
    I know I wouldn't wait to see what kind of day he is having. The time it takes to ask 1 question he can fire 10 shots.
    What does color have to do with it? Black, white, green, purple, it doesnt matter. if you have a gun and are displaying it in a threatening manner police have the right to protect themsleves.
    I know if someone who is armed breaks into my house, I am not going to try and have a conversation with him and see how he's feeling while he's pointing a gun at me if I have the option to use force myself. If I were in a situation where someone was pointing a gun at me and I had an option to eliminate that threat, I really don't care what he would have to say at that point.
    Maybe we need better methods of prevention, better means to help the mentally ill so it never reaches that point. That I would agree with. But once it reaches that point, everyone has the right to protect themselves.
  • tbergs
    tbergs Posts: 10,407
    edited May 2017
    And what's with everyone thinking police are Dirty Harry who can magically fire one shot and eliminate a threat? They train their whole career, but most never have to actually shoot their gun in a real life situation. This isn't the gun range or a deer stand. The target at the other end of the barrel can kill you. These aren't cold malicious serial killers who have the calm and emotionless response many try to paint them with. Think of the most adrenaline inducing thing you have ever done in your life and now picture yourself holding a gun and trying to shoot something 50 yards away. Your whole body becomes tense, all sounds disappear, your vision becomes narrowed to a single object and time literally slows to a crawl even though everything is happening insanely fast.
    It's a hopeless situation...
  • tbergs
    tbergs Posts: 10,407
    CM189191 said:
    How does that change what the police did based on the information they had at the time of the call? Since he was known to be mentally ill, they shouldn't shoot at him and are supposed to know he has a toy gun?

    It's an unfortunate incident and further exemplifies the need to address the mental health crisis in this country.
    It's a hopeless situation...
  • CM189191
    CM189191 Posts: 6,927
    tbergs said:
    CM189191 said:
    How does that change what the police did based on the information they had at the time of the call? Since he was known to be mentally ill, they shouldn't shoot at him and are supposed to know he has a toy gun?

    It's an unfortunate incident and further exemplifies the need to address the mental health crisis in this country.
    It's an unfortunate incident when I lose my keys, this is a little more serious than that. I'm sure the police will be very forthcoming with any/all available video.
  • CM189191 said:
    tbergs said:
    CM189191 said:
    How does that change what the police did based on the information they had at the time of the call? Since he was known to be mentally ill, they shouldn't shoot at him and are supposed to know he has a toy gun?

    It's an unfortunate incident and further exemplifies the need to address the mental health crisis in this country.
    It's an unfortunate incident when I lose my keys, this is a little more serious than that. I'm sure the police will be very forthcoming with any/all available video.
    And I'm sure if the video shows the cops were acting professionally that you will be forthcoming with the appropriate praise for their efforts.

    They'll never win with you. I mean... you are arguing the gun was not real so the cops were murderers. How were they to know the gun wasn't real? And exactly how were they supposed to know he had mental problems? The story said he was 'well known' to police, but never offered exactly why he would be well known to police outside of speaking to some personal issues he had at school.

    I understand you are eager to bash cops any chance you get... but c'mon, man.
    "My brain's a good brain!"
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